I Promessi Sposi, by Alessandro Manzoni

Chapter 16

‘ESCAPE, escape, my good fellow! here is a convent; there is a church; this way, that way,’ was
heard by Renzo on every side. As to escaping, the reader may judge whether he would have need of advice on this head.
From the first moment that the hope of extricating himself from the talons of the police had crossed his mind, he had
begun to form his plans, and resolved, if he succeeded in this one, to flee without delay, not only out of the city,
but also out of the duchy of Milan. — For — thought he — they have my name on their black books, however on earth
they’ve got it; and with my name and surname, they can seize me whenever they like. — As to an asylum, he would not
willingly have recourse to one, unless, indeed, he were reduced to extremity; — For, if I can be a bird of the woods —
thought he again — I won’t be a bird of the cage. — He had therefore designed as his limit and place of refuge, a
village in the territory of Bergamo, where his cousin Bortolo resided, who, the reader may remember, had frequently
solicited Renzo to remove thither. But now the point was how to find his way there. Left in an unknown part of a city
almost equally unknown, Renzo could not even tell by which gate he should pass to go to Bergamo; and when he had learnt
this, he still did not know the way to the gate. He stood for a moment in doubt whether to ask direction of his
liberators; but as, in the short time he had had for reflection on his circumstances, many strong suspicions had
crossed his mind of that obliging sword-cutler, the father of four children, he was not much inclined to reveal his
intentions to a large crowd, where there might be others of the same stamp; he quickly decided, therefore, to get away
from that neighbourhood as fast as he could; and he might afterwards ask his way in a part where nobody would know who
he was, or why he asked it. Merely saying, then, to his deliverers, ‘Thank you, thank you, my friends: blessings on
you!’ and escaping through the space that was immediately cleared for him, he took to his heels, and off he went, up
one little street, and down another, running for some time without knowing whither. When he thought he was far enough
off, he slackened his pace, not to excite suspicion, and began looking around to choose some person of whom he could
make inquiries — some face that would inspire confidence. But here, also, there was need of caution. The inquiry in
itself was suspicious; time pressed; the bailiffs, immediately on making their escape from this rencontre, would,
undoubtedly, renew their search of the fugitive; the rumour of his flight might even have reached hither: and in such a
concourse, Renzo might carefully scrutinize a dozen physiognomies, before he could meet with a countenance that seemed
likely to suit his purpose. That fat fellow, standing at the door of his shop, with legs extended, and his hands behind
his back, the prominent corpulency of this person projecting beyond the doorway, and supporting his great double chin;
who, from mere idleness, was employing himself in alternately raising his tremendous bulk upon his toes, and letting it
sink again upon his heels — he looked too much like an inquisitive gossip, who would have returned interrogatories
instead of replies. That other, advancing with fixed eyes and a drooping lip, instead of being able expeditiously and
satisfactorily to direct another in his way, scarcely seemed to know his own. That tall, stout boy, who, to say the
truth, certainly looked intelligent enough, appeared also rather maliciously inclined, and probably would have taken a
mischievous delight in sending a poor stranger exactly the opposite way to the one he was inquiring after. So true is
it that, to a man in perplexity, almost everything seems to be a new perplexity! At last, fixing his eyes on one who
was approaching in evident haste, he thought that he, having probably some pressing business in hand, would give an
immediate and direct answer, to get rid of him; and hearing him talking to himself, he deemed that he must be an
undesigning person. He, therefore, accosted him with the question, ‘Will you be good enough to tell me, sir, which
direction I should take to go to Bergamo?’

‘To go to Bergamo? The Porta Orientale.’

‘Thank you, sir: and to the Porta Orientale?’

‘Take this street to the left; you will come out into the square of the cathedral; then . . . ‘

‘That will do, sir; I know the rest. Heaven reward you.’ And on he went by the way that had been pointed out to him.
His director looked after him for a moment, and comparing in his mind his way of walking, with the inquiry, thought
within himself — Either he is after somebody, or somebody is after him. —

Renzo reached the square of the cathedral, crossed it, passed by a heap of cinders and extinguished combustibles,
and recognized the relics of the bonfire at which he had assisted the day before; he then passed along the flight of
steps leading up to the cathedral, and saw again the bakehouse of the Crutches half demolished, and guarded by
soldiers; still he proceeded onward, and, by the street which he had already traversed with the crowd, arrived in front
of the convent of the Capuchins, where, glancing at the square and the church-door, he said to himself with a deep
sigh:— That friar yesterday gave me good advice, when he bid me go wait in the church, and employ myself profitably
there. —

Here he stopped a moment to reconnoitre the gate through which he had to pass; and seeing, even at that distance,
many soldiers on guard, his imagination also being rather overstrained, (one must pity him; for he had had enough to
unsettle it), he felt a kind of repugnance at encountering the passage. Here he was, with a place of refuge close at
hand, where, with the letter of recommendation, he would have been well received; and he felt strongly tempted to enter
it. But he quickly summoned up his courage, and thought:— A bird of the woods, as long as I can. Who knows me?
Certainly the bailiffs cannot have divided themselves into enough pieces to come and watch for me at every gate. — He
looked behind him to see if they were coming in that direction, and saw neither them, nor any one who seemed to be
taking notice of him. He, therefore, set off again, slackened the pace of those unfortunate legs which, with their own
good will, would have kept constantly on the run, when it was much better only to walk; and, proceeding leisurely
along, whistling in an under-tone, he arrived at the gate. Just at the entrance there was a party of police-officers,
together with a reinforcement of Spanish soldiers; but these all had their attention di-rected to the outside, to
forbid entrance to such as, hearing the news of an insurrection, would flock thither like vultures to a deserted field
of battle; so that Renzo, quietly walking on, with his eyes bent to the ground, and with a gait between that of a
traveller and a common passenger, passed the threshold without any one speaking a word to him: but his heart beat
violently. Seeing a little street to the right, he took that way to avoid the high road, and continued his course for
some time before he ventured to look round.

On he went; he came to cottages and villages, which he passed without asking their names: he felt certain of getting
away from Milan, and hoped he was going towards Bergamo, and this was enough for him at present. From time to time he
kept glancing behind him, while walking onwards, occasionally looking at and rubbing one or other of his wrists, which
were still a little benumbed, and marked with a red line from the pressure of the manacles. His thoughts were, as every
one may imagine, a confused medley of repentance, disputes, disquietude, revenge, and other more tender feelings; it
was a wearying endeavour to recall what he had said and done the night before, to unravel the mysterious part of his
mournful adventures, and, above all, how they had managed to discover his name. His suspicions naturally fell on the
sword-cutler, to whom he remembered having spoken very frankly. And retracing the way in which he had drawn him into
conversation, together with his whole behaviour, and those proffers which always ended in wishing to know something
about him, his suspicions were changed almost to certainty. He had, besides, some faint recollection of continuing to
chatter after the departure of the cutler; but with whom? guess it, ye crickets; of what? his memory, spite of his
efforts, could not tell him this: it could only remind him that he had not been at all himself that evening. The poor
fellow was lost in these speculations: he was like a man who has affixed his signature to a number of blank formulae,
and committed them to the care of one he esteemed honest and honourable, and having discovered him to be a shuffling
meddler, wishes to ascertain the state of his affairs. What can he discover? It is a chaos. Another painful speculation
was how to form some design for the future that would not be a merely aerial project, or at least a melancholy one.

By and by, however, he became still more anxious about finding his way; and after walking for some distance at a
venture, he saw the necessity of making some inquiries. Yet he felt particularly reluctant to utter the word ‘Bergamo,’
as if there were something suspicious or dangerous in the name, and could not bring himself to pronounce it. He
resolved, however, to ask direction, as he had before done at Milan, of the first passenger whose countenance suited
his fancy, and he shortly met with one.

‘You are out of the road,’ replied his guide; and having thought a moment, he pointed out to him, partly by words
and partly by gestures, the way he should take to regain the high road. Renzo thanked him for his directions, and
pretended to follow them, by actually taking the way he had indicated, with the intention of almost reaching the public
road, and then, without losing sight of it, to keep parallel with its course as far as possible, but not to set foot
within it. The design was easier to conceive than to effect, and the result was, that, by going thus from right to left
in a zigzag course, partly following the directions he obtained by the way, partly correcting them by his own judgment,
and adapting them to his intentions, and partly allowing himself to be guided by the lanes he traversed, our fugitive
had walked perhaps twelve miles, when he was not more than six distant from Milan; and as to Bergamo, it was a great
chance if he were not going away from it. He began at last to perceive that by this method he would never come to an
end, and determined to find out some remedy. The plan that occurred to his mind was to get the name of some village
bordering on the confines, which he could reach by the neighbouring roads: and by asking his way thither, he could
collect information, without leaving behind him the name of Bergamo, which seemed to him to savour so strongly of
flight, escape, and crime.

While ruminating on the best way of obtaining these instructions without exciting suspicion, he saw a bush hanging
over the door of a solitary cottage just outside a little village. He had for some time felt the need of recruiting his
strength, and thinking that this would be the place to serve two purposes at once, he entered. There was no one within
but an old woman, with her distaff at her side, and the spindle in her hand. He asked for something to eat, and was
offered a little stracchino1 and some good wine; he gladly accepted the food, but
excused himself from taking any wine, feeling quite an abhorrence of it, after the errors it had made him guilty of the
night before; and then sat down, begging the old woman to make haste. She served up his meal in a moment, and then
began to tease her customer with inquiries, both about himself, and the grand doings at Milan, the report of which had
already reached here. Renzo not only contrived to parry and elude her inquiries with much dexterity, but even profited
by the difficulty, and made the curiosity of the old woman subservient to his intentions, when she asked him where he
was going to.

‘I have to go to many places,’ replied he: ‘and if I can find a moment of time, I want to pass a little while at
that village, rather a large one, on the road to Bergamo, near the border, but in the territory of Milan
. . . What do they call it?’— there must be one there, surely — thought he, in the mean while.

‘Gorgonzola you mean,’ replied the old woman.

‘Gorgonzola!’ repeated Renzo, as if to imprint the word better on his memory. ‘Is it very far from here?’ resumed
he.

‘I don’t know exactly; it may be ten or twelve miles. If one of my sons were here, he could tell you.’

‘And do you think I can go by these pleasant lanes without taking the high road? There is such a dust there! such a
shocking dust! It’s so long since it rained!’

‘I fancy you can: you can ask at the first village you came to, after turning to the right.’ And she named it.

‘That’s well,’ said Renzo; and rising, he took in his hand a piece of bread remaining from his scanty meal, of a
very different quality to that which he had found the day before at the foot of the cross of San Dionigi; and paying
the reckoning, he set off again, following the road to the right hand. By taking care not to wander from it more than
was needful, and with the name of Gorgonzola in his mouth, he proceeded from village to village, until, about an hour
before sunset, he arrived there.

During his walk, he had resolved to make another stop here, and to take some rather more substantial refreshment.
His body also craved a little rest; but rather than gratify this desire, Renzo would have sunk in a swoon upon the
ground. He proposed gaining some information at the inn about the distance of the Adda, to ascertain dexterously if
there was any cross-road that led to it, and to set off again, even at this hour, immediately after his repast. Born
and brought up at the second source, so to say, of this river, he had often heard it said, that at a certain point, and
for some considerable distance, it served as a boundary between the Milanese and Venetian states; he had no very
distinct idea of where this boundary commenced, or how far it extended; but, for the present, his principal object was
to get beyond it. If he did not succeed in reaching it that evening, he resolved to walk as long as the night and his
strength would allow him, and afterwards to wait the approaching day in a field, or a wilderness, or wherever God
pleased, provided it were not an inn.

After walking a few paces along the street at Gorgonzola, he noticed a sign, entered the inn, and on the landlord’s
advancing to meet him, ordered something to eat, and a small measure of wine; the additional miles he had passed, and
the time of day, having overcome his extreme and fanatical hatred of this beverage. ‘I must beg you to be quick,’ added
he; ‘for I’m obliged to go on my way again very soon.’ This he said not only because it was the truth, but also for
fear the host, imagining that he was going to pass the night there, should come and ask him his name and surname, and
where he came from, and on what business . . . But enough!

The landlord replied that he should be waited upon immediately; and Renzo sat down at the end of the table, near the
door, the usual place of the bashful.

Some loungers of the village had assembled in this room, who, after having argued over, and discussed, and commented
upon, the grand news from Milan of the preceding day, were now longing to know a little how matters were going on; the
more so, as their first information was rather fitted to irritate their curiosity than to satisfy it; a sedition,
neither subdued nor triumphant; suspended, rather than terminated, by the approach of night; a defective thing; the
con-clusion of an act, rather than of a drama. One of these detached himself from the party, and seating himself by the
new comer, asked him if he came from Milan.

‘I?’ said Renzo, in a tone of surprise, to gain time for a reply.

‘You, if the question is allowable.’

Renzo, shaking his head, compressing his lips, and uttering an inarticulate sound, replied; ‘Milan, from what I hear
. . . from what they say around . . . is not exactly a place to go at present, unless in case of
great necessity.’

‘I come from Liscate,’ replied the youth, promptly, who, in the mean while, had decided upon his reply. Strictly
speaking, he had come from there, because he had passed it; and he had learnt the name from a traveller on the road,
who had mentioned that village as the first he must pass on his way to Gorgonzola.

‘Oh! said his friend, in that tone which seems to say: You’d have done better if you had come from Milan; but
patience. ‘And at Liscate,’ added he, ‘did you hear nothing about Milan?’

‘There may very likely have been somebody who knew something about it,’ replied the mountaineer, ‘but I heard
nothing.’ And this was proffered in that particular manner which seems to mean: I’ve finished. The querist returned to
his party, and a moment afterwards, the landlord came to set out his meal.

‘How far is it from here to the Adda?’ asked Renzo, in an undertone, with the air of one who is half asleep, and an
indifferent manner, such as we have already seen him assume on some other occasions.

‘To the Adda — to cross it?’ said the host.

‘That is . . . yes . . . to the Adda.’

‘Do you want to cross by the bridge of Cassano, or the Ferry of Canonica?’

‘Oh, I don’t mind where . . . I only ask from curiosity.’

‘Well, I mention these, because they are the places gentlemen generally choose, and people who can give an account
of themselves.’

‘Very well; and how far is it?’

‘You may reckon that to either one or the other, it is somewhere about six miles, more or less.’

‘Six miles! I didn’t know that,’ said Renzo. ‘Well,’ resumed he, with a still greater air of indifference, almost
amounting to affectation, ‘well, I suppose there are other places for crossing, if anybody is inclined to take a short
cut?’

‘There are, certainly,’ replied the landlord, fixing his eyes upon him with a look full of malicious curiosity. This
was enough to silence all the other inquiries which our youth had ready on his lips. He drew his plate before him, and,
looking at the small measure of wine which the landlord had set down on the table, said, ‘Is the wine pure?’

‘As gold,’ said the host; ‘ask all the people of the village and neighbourhood, for they know it; and, besides, you
can taste yourself.’ So saying, he turned towards his other customers.

‘Plague on these landlords!’ exclaimed Renzo in his heart; ‘the more I know of them, the worse I find them.’
However, he began to eat very heartily, listening at the same time, without appearing to pay any attention, to see what
he could learn, to discover what was the general impression here about the great event in which he had had no little
share; and, above all, to ascertain if, amongst these talkers, there was one honest man, of whom a poor fellow might
venture to make inquiries, without fear of getting into a scrape, and being forced to talk about his own doings.

‘But,’ said one, ‘this time, it seems clear the Milanese wanted to bring about a very good thing. Well; to-morrow,
at latest, we shall know something.’

‘I’m sorry I didn’t go to Milan this morning,’ said another.

‘If you go to-morrow, I’ll go with you,’ said a third; ‘so will I,’ said another; ‘and I,’ said another.

‘What I want to know,’ resumed the first, ‘is, whether these Milanese gentlemen will think of us poor people out of
the city; or if they’ll only get good laws made for themselves. Do you know how they do, eh? They are all proud
citizens, every one for himself; and we strangers mightn’t be Christians.’

‘We’ve mouths, too, either to eat, or to give our own opinions,’ said another, with a voice as modest as the
proposition was daring; ‘and when things have gone a little further . . . ‘But he did not think fit to finish
the sentence.

‘There’s corn hidden, not only at Milan,’ another was beginning, with a dark and designing countenance, when they
heard the trampling of a horse approaching; they ran to the door, and having discovered who it was, they all went out
to meet him. It was a Milanese merchant who generally passed the night at this inn, in journeying two or three times a
year to Bergamo on business; and as he almost always found the same company there, they were all his acquaintances.
They now crowded around him; one took his bridle, another his stirrup, and saluted him with, ‘Welcome.’

‘I’m glad to see you.’

‘Have you had a good journey?’

‘Very good; and how are you all?’

‘Pretty well, pretty well. What news from Milan?’

‘Ah! you are always for news,’ said the merchant, dismounting and leaving his horse in the care of a boy. ‘And,
besides,’ continued he, entering the door with the rest of the party, ‘by this time you know it, perhaps, better than I
do.’

‘I assure you we know nothing,’ said more than one, laying his hand on his heart.

‘Is it possible?’ said the merchant. ‘Then you shall hear some fine . . . or rather, some bad news. Hey,
landlord, is my usual bed at liberty? Very well; a glass of wine, and my usual meal; be quick, for I must go to bed
early, and set off to-morrow morning very early, so as to get to Bergamo by dinner-time. And you,’ continued he,
sitting down at the opposite end of the table to where Renzo was seated, silently but attentively listening, ‘you don’t
know about all the diabolical doings of yesterday?’

‘Yes, we heard something about yesterday.’

‘You see now!’ rejoined the merchant; ‘you know the news. I thought, when you are stationed here all day, to watch
and sound everybody that comes by . . . ’

‘But to-day: how have matters gone to-day?’

‘Ah, to-day. Do you know nothing about to-day?’

‘Nothing whatever; nobody has come by.’

‘Then let me wet my lips; and afterwards I’ll tell you about everything. You shall hear.’ Having filled his glass,
he took it in his right hand, and, lifting up his mustachios with the first two fingers of his left, and then settling
his beard with the palm, he drank it off, and continued:—‘There was little wanting, my worthy friends, to make to-day
as rough a day as yesterday, or worse. I can scarcely believe it true that I am here to tell you about it; for I had
once put aside every thought of my journey, to stay and take care of my unfortunate shop.’

‘What was the matter, then?’ said one of his auditors.

‘What was the matter? you shall hear.’ And, carving the meat that was set before him, he began to eat, at the same
time continuing his narration. The crowd, standing at both sides of the table, listened to him with open mouths; and
Renzo, apparently giving no heed to what he said, listened, perhaps, more eagerly than any of the others, as he slowly
finished the last few mouthfuls.

‘This morning, then, those rascals who made such a horrible uproar yesterday, repaired to the appointed places of
meeting (there was already an understanding between them, and everything was arranged); they united together, and began
again the old story of going from street to street, shouting to collect a crowd. You know it is like when one sweeps a
house — with respect be it spoken — the heap of dust increases as one goes along. When they thought they had assembled
enough people, they set off towards the house of the superintendent of provisions; as if the treatment they gave him
yesterday was not enough, to a gentleman of his character — the villains! And the lies they told about him! All
inventions: he is a worthy, exact gentleman; and I may say so, for I am very intimate with him, and serve him with
cloth for his servants’ livery. They proceeded then towards this house; you ought to see what a rabble, and what faces:
just fancy their having passed my shop, with faces that . . . the Jews of the Via Crucis are nothing
to them. And such things as they uttered! enough to make one stop one’s ears, if it had not been that it might have
turned to account in discovering one. They went forward then with the kind intention of plundering the house, but
. . . ‘Here he raised his left hand and extended it in the air, placing the end of his thumb on the point of
his nose.

‘But?’ said almost all his auditors.

‘But,’ continued the merchant, ‘they found the street blockaded with planks and carts, and behind this barricado, a
good file of soldiers, with their guns levelled, and the butt-ends resting on their shoulders. When they saw this
preparation . . . What would you have done?’

‘Turned back.’

‘To be sure; and so did they. But just listen if it wasn’t the devil that inspired them. They reached the
Cordusio, and there saw the bake-house which they wanted to plunder the day before: here they were busy in
distributing bread to their customers; there were noblemen there, ay, the very flower of the nobility, to watch that
everything went on in good order; but the mob (they had the devil within them, I tell you, and besides, there were some
whispering in their ears, and urging them on), the mob rushed in furiously; “seize away, and I will seize too:” in the
twinkling of an eye, noblemen, bakers, customers, loaves, benches, counters, troughs, chests, bags, sieves, bran,
flour, dough, all were turned upside down.’

‘And the soldiers?’

‘The soldiers had the vicar’s house to defend; one cannot sing and carry the cross at the same time. It was all done
in the twinkling of an eye, I tell you: off and away; everything that could be put to any use was carried off. And then
they proposed again the beautiful scene of yesterday — dragging the rest to the square, and making a bonfire. They had
already begun — the villains! — to carry some things out of the house, when one greater villain than the rest — what do
you think was the proposal he made?’

‘What?’

‘What! to make a pile of everything in the shop, and to set fire to the heap and the house together. No sooner said
than done . . . ’

‘Did they set fire to it?’

‘Wait. A worthy man of the neighbourhood had an inspiration from Heaven. He ran up-stairs, sought for a crucifix,
found one, and hung it in front of one of the windows; then he took two candles which had been blessed, lit them, and
set them outside, on the window-sill, one on each side of the crucifix. The mob looked up. It must be owned, there is
still some fear of God in Milan; everybody came to their senses. At least, I mean most of them; there were some,
certainly, devils enough to have set fire to Paradise, for the sake of plunder; but, finding that the crowd was not of
their opinion, they were obliged to abandon their design, and keep quiet. Just fancy now who arrived — all their Graces
of the Cathedral, in procession, with the cross elevated, and in their canonical robes; and my lord the Arch-presbyter
began preaching on one side, and my lord the Penitentiary on the other, and others again, scattered here and there:
“But, good people; what would you do? is this the example you set your children? go home, go home; you shall have bread
at a low price; if you’ll only look you’ll see that the rate is pasted up at every corner.”’

‘Was it so?’

‘What? was it so? Do you think that their Graces of the Cathedral would come, in their magnificent robes, to tell
them falsehoods?’

‘And what did the people do?’

‘They dispersed by degrees; some ran to the corners of the streets, and for those who could read, there was the
fixed rate, sure enough. What do you think of it? eight ounces of bread for a penny.’

‘What good luck!’

‘The proof of the pudding is in the eating. How much flour do you think they have wasted yesterday and this
morning? Enough to support the Duchy for two months.’

‘Then they’ve made no good laws for us in the country?’

‘What has been done at Milan is entirely at the expense of the city. I don’t know what to say to you: it must be as
God wills. Fortunately, the sedition is finished, for I haven’t told you all yet; here comes the best part.’

‘What is there besides?’

‘Only, that, last evening, or this morning, I’m not sure which, many of the leaders have been seized, and four of
them, it is known, are to be hung directly. No sooner did this get abroad, than everybody went home the shortest way,
not to run the risk of becoming number five. When I left Milan, it looked like a convent of friars.’

‘But will they really hang them?’

‘Undoubtedly, and quickly, too,’ replied the merchant.

‘And what will the people do?’ asked the same interrogator as had put the other question.

‘The people will go to see them,’ said the merchant. ‘They had such a desire to see a Christian hanging in the open
air, that they wanted — the vagabonds! — to despatch the superintendent of provisions in that way. By this exchange
they will have four wretches, attended with every formality, accompanied by Capuchins, and by friars of the buona
morte:2 but they deserve it. It is an interference of Providence, you see; and it’s a
necessary thing. They were already beginning to divert themselves by entering the shops, and helping themselves without
paying; if they’d let them go on so, after bread, wine would have had its turn, and so on from thing to thing
. . . . You may imagine whether they would abandon so convenient a practice, of their own free will. And I
can tell you, that was no very pleasant thought for an honest man keeping a shop.’

‘Certainly not,’ said one of his hearers. ‘Certainly not,’ replied the rest, in chorus.

‘And,’ continued the merchant, wiping his beard with the tablecloth, ‘it had all been projected for some time: there
was a league, you know.’

‘A league, was there?’

‘Yes, there was a league. All cabals formed by the Navarrines, by that French cardinal there, you know, with a
half-Turkish name, who every day contrives something fresh to annoy the court of Spain. But, above all, he aims at
playing some trick in Milan; for he knows well enough — the knave — that the strength of the king lies there.’

‘Ay.’

‘Shall I give you a proof of it? Those who’ve made the greatest noise were strangers; there were faces going about
which had never before been seen in Milan. By the by, I forgot to tell you one thing which was told me for certain. The
police had caught one of these fellows in an inn . . . ‘ Renzo, who had not lost a single syllable of this
conversation, was taken with a cold shudder on hearing this chord touched, and almost slipped under the table before he
thought of trying to contain himself. No one, however, perceived it; and the speaker, without interrupting his relation
for a moment, had continued: ‘They don’t exactly know where he came from, who sent him, nor what kind of man he was,
but he was certainly one of the leaders. Yesterday, in the midst of the uproar, he played the very devil; and then, not
content with that, he must begin to harangue the people, and propose — a mere trifle! — to murder all the nobility! The
great rascal! Who would support the poor if all the nobles were killed? The police, who had been watching him, laid
hands upon him; they found on his person a great bundle of letters, and were leading him away to prison, but his
companions, who were keeping guard round the inn, came in great numbers, and delivered him — the villain!’

‘And what became of him?’

‘It isn’t known; he may be fled, or he may be concealed in Milan: they are people who have neither house nor home,
and yet find lodging and a place of refuge everywhere; however, though the devil can and will help them, yet they may
fall into the hands of justice when they least expect it; for when the pear is ripe it must fall. For the present, it
is well known that the letters are in possession of government, and that the whole conspiracy is therein described; and
they say that many people are implicated in it. This much is certain, that they have turned Milan upside down, and
would have done much worse. It is said that the bakers are rogues: I know they are; but they ought to be hung in the
course of justice. They say there is corn hidden; who doesn’t know that? But it is the business of the government to
keep a good look-out to bring it to light, and to hang the monopolists in company with the bakers. And if government
does nothing, the city ought to remonstrate; and if they don’t listen the first time, remonstrate again; for by dint or
appeals they will get what they want; but not adopt the villainous practice of furiously entering shops and warehouses
to get booty.’

Renzo’s small meal had turned into poison. It seemed like an age before he could get out of, and away from, the inn
and the village; and a dozen times, at least, he had said to himself: ‘Now I may surely go.’ But the fear of exciting
suspicion, now increased beyond measure, and prevailing over every other thought, had kept him still nailed to his
seat. In this perplexity, he thought the chatterer must at last stop talking about him, and determined in his own mind
to make his escape as soon as another subject was started.

“For this reason,’ said one of the party, ‘knowing how these things go, and that honest men fare but badly in such
disturbances, I wouldn’t let my curiosity conquer, and have, therefore, remained quietly at home.’

‘Neither would I move, for the same reason,’ said another.

‘I,’ added a third, ‘if I had happened by chance to be at Milan, I would have left any business whatever unfinished,
and have returned home as quickly as possible. I have a wife and children; and, besides, to tell the truth, I don’t
like such stirs.’

At this moment the landlord, who had been eagerly listening with the rest, advanced towards the other end of the
table to see what the stranger was doing. Renzo seized the opportunity, and beckoning to the host, asked for his
account, settled it without dispute, though his purse was by this time very low; and without further delay, went
directly to the door, passed the threshold, and taking care not to turn along the same road as that by which he had
arrived, set off in the opposite direction, trusting to the guidance of Providence.

2 A denomination usually given to the monks of the order of St. Paul,
the first hermit. They are called Brothers of death, Fratres à morte, on account of a figure of a Death’s head
which they were always to have with them, to remind them continually of their last end. This order, by its
constitutions, made in 1620, does not seem to have been established long before Pope Paul V. Louis XIII., in 1621,
permitted them to settle in France. The order was, probably, suppressed by Pope Urban VIII. The fraternity of death
buries such dead as are abandoned by their relations, and causes masses to be celebrated for them.’